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Introduction to the Sample Labs

Disclaimer and Introduction

It was our intent to include these labs in the next version of the manual,
being prepared for the Spring 2007 term. However, due to popular demand, we
are releasing them early in "raw" form. Essentially these are rough drafts of
the final product, similar to the Release Candidate 1 version of software from
Microsoft. They are not perfect, and will be edited in the next few months.
However, they will show you, in general terms, how to write lab reports and
prepare presentations. As always, your comments would be appreciated.

What follows are two sample labs and the lab reports and presentations that
might be done as work for them. As you'll be able to quickly see, they are
obviously fictional labs.

Lab 1701 takes place in the 24th Century, and is a regular lab.
Lab 500 takes place at the current time, and is a competition. This way you'll
be able to see the differences between how a competition lab and regular lab are
done. Both labs are meant to be entertaining as a way to make sure you read them
all the way to the end. However, keep in mind that if they were real, they would
be serious.

For the lab reports, there are two versions. The first version is an
annotated version of the report, with paragraphs in red being used to explain
what comes next. You should examine this version of the report carefully for
both labs, and understand what's being said. The second version of both labs is
the report itself, with the annotation missing, so that you can see what the
actual report looks like.

Similarly, there are two versions of each presentation. First, there will be
an annotated version, where slides are included to explain what comes next.
There are also versions of the labs without annotation so you can see how they
would actually be presented.